The summer belongs to Sherry Cola (again), and rightfully so. As an actor, writer, comedian, and trailblazer, she’s built a career rooted in honesty, humor, and intention. With every project, she challenges expectations and creates space for stories that reflect the world as it truly is—messy, funny, heartfelt, and human. Whether she’s delivering a punchline or making a point, Sherry brings something entirely her own to the screen—and audiences are paying attention. In Bride Hard, Sherry joins Rebel Wilson in a high-octane action-comedy that blends bullets with bridal bouquets. Sam
Pop Culturalist is excited to be partnering with Warner Bros. Pictures to give away tickets to an NYC screening of F1. You and a guest will see the film before it’s released on June 27th. All the details are below. Good luck! About the Film Racing legend Sonny Hayes (Brad Pitt) is coaxed out of retirement to lead a struggling Formula 1 team—and mentor a young hotshot driver (Damson Idris)—while chasing one more chance at glory. The feature has been shot during actual Grand Prix weekends as the team competes
Horror has always been more than jump scares. At its best, it’s a mirror, a metaphor, a vehicle for exploring the fears we’re not always ready to name. In The Other, that tradition is alive and well—but layered with something even deeper. Produced by Lisa Normand and Jeffrey Reddick, the film confronts grief, identity, and belonging through the eyes of two young heroines. Independent in spirit and execution, The Other had no studio interference, no mandatory rewrites—just a team of filmmakers who believed in telling a story their way. That
Horror can reflect our deepest fears, or—at its most powerful—tap into something achingly human. In The Other, writer-director Paul Etheredge tells a story that threads grief and longing through a slow-building sense of dread, with just the right amount of dark humor along the way. What begins as a grounded drama gradually twists into something far more unsettling. It’s a genre-defying film where the line between heartbreak and horror becomes increasingly blurred, anchored by unforgettable performances. Olivia Macklin, Dylan McTee, and Avangeline Friedlander each bring a quiet intensity to their